Company of Wolves, The (1984)

The cover art misrepresents this as a werewolf horror film. There are wolves
that turn into men and back again, but no creatures in-between. It's actually
an atmospheric dream fantasy. The grisly animatronic transformations seem out
of place, although perhaps they add a nightmare dimension. I would have
dropped them.

Rosaleen (Sarah Patterson, said to be age 12 -- that can't be right) tosses
restlessly in her sleep, her dreams filled with objects from her room. The
dreams are symbolically about sex and the transition every adolescent girl has
to make: how long does she stay at home with the stuffed animals, and when
does she get out of the house, leave the safe forest path and run with the
wolves?

She has several stories, all filled with strange dream logic:

Her nasty big sister in the haunted wood, attacked and killed by wolves.

The main Red Riding Hood plot, a frame for the other stories.

Granny's tale of the traveling man who became a wolf on his wedding night.

Granny's tale of the Devil in the woods. Rosaleen is his chauffeur, blond
now with a uniform and knowing smirk. Terrance Stamp is the Devil,
uncredited, and his car a white Rolls Royce.

Rosaleen's tale of the pregnant village girl who attends a noble wedding and
curses the guests, turning them into wolves.

Rosaleen's tale of the wounded wolf-girl. Healed by the village priest, she
returns to the underworld.

The limited budget and studio-bound staging give it a rather good dream-like
and storybook appearance. The George Fenton score, once you subtract the
bizarro magic bits, is wonderful. I still hum the main theme after all these
years.

The final scene does not make much sense: she wakes up and real wolves charge
into her bedroom. Maybe that means the dangers are in reality and not just in
dreams, but of course wolf bedroom invasions don't happen in reality. So the
ending is a just a completely different fantasy.

The DVD is 4:3 letterboxed but retains the 1.66:1 original aspect ratio. The
UK R2 PAL disc is anamorphic and said to have a director's commentary. A
Blu-ray import is available, but comments indicate it is of indifferent
quality.